Realistic $ for a reliable tractor?

/ Realistic $ for a reliable tractor? #1  

Tractor_Jack

New member
Joined
Jan 23, 2026
Messages
2
Tractor
None yet
Background:
Recently purchased a house on 10 acres of wooded land in the mountains of Washington state. ~1 mile of trails, small cleared yard (no mowing required), 150ft sloped gravel driveway. Moving from the city I’ve never owned or operated a tractor. I’m about an hour from any dealer, but there’s pretty much all the major brands represented.

Realizing I need some machinery to speed up all the tasks around the property (moving snow, skidding logs, regrading driveway, laying mulch, trail maintenance, etc). Importantly I don’t have grass to mow, though am considering a brush hog for the trails.

Tractor Requirements: FEL, cat 1 3pt hitch, 4wd.

Given all this, what’s a realistic budget for something *reliable*? I’m looking for equipment because I already have more projects than time, and don’t need another one.

The cheapest around me seem to be about $5k for an older 1970-1980 compact tractor (yanmar 1610d or kubota b6800 equivalent).

The next step up seems to be around $10-15k for a more modern, used compact or subcompact.

Finally I could buy new, but I’m wary to drop $20k+ when I’m not entirely confident on what size tractor I need or how much I will actually use it.

Ideally I’d love to stay under $10k but I would rather spend a bit more and get something I will want to actually use vs an expensive lawn ornament. Apologies for the novel, but I wanted to include as much context as possible. Please let me know your thoughts and advice!
 
/ Realistic $ for a reliable tractor? #2  
For $15-18k you should be able to buy a 4x4 small compact (not a Sub-Compact) with a loader, land plane and brush hog ... Check out TractorHouse.com | New & Used Farm Equipment For Sale and put in your zip code ...

Another idea is see what is available locally to RENT for a weekend, maybe a little Kubota BX or B would work for you, or a L sized tractor, rent one for a weekend, then rent a different sized one the next weekend ... ?

ETA - if they have John Deere's to rent the BX is similar to a 1 series, B is similar to a 2 series (although JD makes 2 sizes of the 2 series!) and a L is similar to a 3 series ...
 
/ Realistic $ for a reliable tractor? #3  
I really like my BX and it has been totally reliable with backhoe.

The down side is the small size tires can be problematic in the woodlands… also, I had to add a skid plate to protect the underbelly… especially the hydro fan.

My brother wanted the same but I showed him the L size and he is glad he went that way…

Lots of options… my WA neighbors have all kinds…

My local WA Home Depot rents Kubota BX TLB (Tractor, Loader, Backhoe)
 
/ Realistic $ for a reliable tractor? #4  
Good advice to rent to get a feel for your needs.

It is amazing what even a smaller tractor can do but some can get tippy and you are in the mountains and inexperienced. Hills are not tractor friendly. Easy to have a bad accident.

Some of the Chinese mini skid steers have made me consider adding one for the jobs that do not need a tractor my size. I am thinking about renting one to evaluate it. A decent new one is under $10k.
 
/ Realistic $ for a reliable tractor? #5  
I doubt the rentals would have wheel spacers, but once the size is figured out, they can be added, same with fluid or steel wheel weights, which will increase side to side stability ...

If I could go back in time to 2022 when I bought my SCUT (which I love!) I would have been much better off with a larger framed 25 HP tractor like the Massey Ferguson 1825, or Kubota L2501, John Deere 3025 sized tractor, if they had been available, as they have much larger tires, and more loader lift capabilities, but still under the emissions system requirements ...

Once you get into the older ones, there are no emissions system on them, if that is important to you ...
 
/ Realistic $ for a reliable tractor? #6  
I think the 10 to 15k is a realistic budget. The size of your property doesn’t have a lot to do with what you need but what you plan to do on it does.
 
/ Realistic $ for a reliable tractor? #7  
Unless you are really willing to do some deep dive searches for parts, stay in the 1990s and forward. 1970s and 1980s, smaller machines, parts often just dont exist anymore, and im including Kubota, Deere, Massey, Case/IH, Ford/NH, ect. With that, 4wd, loader, 1980s, your still spending $6500-9000, and you are a clutch away from a scrap yard.

Now, that kinda leaves 3 directions; older, larger, with good parts; Massey 135, Ford 2000; heck you can probably find a Massey 135 engine at Walmart.... They won't be 4wd, they mostly won't have a loader, but they are $2.5-5k.

You have new. Kioti CK3510 is like $26k, TYM, Bobcat, ect, and in the grand scheme, for $350/month, you have something you know works.

Then you have 10-15 year old, "modern" machines, from major brands, that are $12.5k-15k. Parts are available, and they should have plenty of life, but you are paying nearly new, fiancing is hard, and there is a real chance that it could need a major repair
 
/ Realistic $ for a reliable tractor? #8  
The cheapest reliable tractors we have are late 40’s early 50’s Ford 8N’s. The last one we bought was $1200 but needed tires at the time.

Perfect tractors for trails. Not so much for working large open fields where I prefer more tractor.

Better parts availability than some new tractors, if you ever need any, too.
 

Marketplace Items

2007 PETERBILT FLAT TOP SLEEPER  385 (A60736)
2007 PETERBILT...
2014 Ag Spray Schaben Sidedresser (A56438)
2014 Ag Spray...
2024 JOHN DEERE 325G SKID STEER (A62129)
2024 JOHN DEERE...
500BBL WHEELED FRAC TANK (A58214)
500BBL WHEELED...
2020 MACK GRANITE (A60736)
2020 MACK GRANITE...
John Deere 6300 (A60462)
John Deere 6300...
 
Top